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HOME: SEPTEMBER 8, 2006: SCREENS
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DVD Watch

BY KIMBERLEY JONES


KICKING AND SCREAMING

Criterion, $29.95

With Noah Baumbach's recent Oscar nomination for The Squid and the Whale, his critical legitimacy is now finally catching up to his long-held cult status, one earned for his 1995 debut, this desultory account of the first post-collegiate year in the lives of four men who would be boys. For obsessives of a certain age (in the whereabouts of 30 now), Kicking and Screaming took its place (for me, in a shitty dub off of Comedy Central) alongside Office Space and Bottle Rocket as generation-defining pictures for people who preferred their Gen X served deadpan and with limited pop-culture posturing (except, of course, hat tips to Cormac McCarthy and "Monkeys, Monkeys, Ted & Alice"). So how does it hold up, the arch back-and-forth of these kids treading water in dead-end video-store gigs and oddly affecting affairs with underage girls? Beautifully: The busted-up love between feckless Grover (Josh Hamilton) and Jane (Olivia D'abo, retainer-sexy), told in flashback to Nick Drake and Jimmie Dale Gilmore, has grown more tender with time. For a film that coined the quotable, "I'm nostalgic for conversations I had yesterday," the Criterion Collection's disc is surprisingly thin on fond remembrance and backward-glancing. There are three short, amiable, but not especially illuminating interviews with Baumbach and his three male co-leads: Hamilton, Chris Eigeman, and Carlos Jacott (one kernel tossed is that Baumbach initially wanted to cast his Vassar classmate, the unknown Jacott, as the romantic lead, a proposal the investors soundly shot down). Also included are promo-like bits that originally aired on IFC during the film's premiere at the New York Film Festival in 1995; a smattering of deleted scenes; and an aimless, albeit funny enough, 2000 short starring Jacott and K&S alum John Lehr that never went anywhere. The best reveal? Eric Stoltz's Chet, he of the bartenderly bons mots ("If Plato is a fine red wine, then Aristotle is a dry martini"), was written slapdash just before production, when the hiring of then-indie darling Stoltz was a greenlight-prerequisite. How's that for datedness?

Also Out Now

Julia (20th Century Fox, $14.98): Fred Zinnemann's 1977 Oscar-feted Julia, adapted from the notoriously prickly Lillian Hellman's memoirs, charts the Holocaust-era friendship between Hellman (Jane Fonda) and resistance fighter Julia (Vanessa Redgrave).

White Nights (Sony Pictures, $19.94): The setup – two crossways defectors, one Soviet, one American – might be a slice of Cold War hokum, but the execution – Gregory Hines on tap, Mikhail Baryshnikov handling the balletics – is flawless.

Battlestar Galactica Season 2.5 (episodes 11-20; Universal Studios, $49.98): It's about frakkin' time: The tail end of the stellar second season hits shelves with plenty of time for new viewers to play catch-up before the SciFi Channel launches season three in October.

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COMMENTS
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what a disappointment guest Sep 08, 2006 - 11:21 pm
I saw the Kicking and Screaming screening at the recent Licoln Center tribute, and almost the entire cast was there. The stories they told are far different than are on the Criterion DVD, apparently. At the Q and A after the screening, Mr. Stoltz told the story of how he and Carlos Jacott improvised a great deal of the movie, including the infamous book club scene. Any mention of this on the disc? Nope. The extras are not worth it, I was expecting much more. This film is one of Noah Baumbachs best, and it seems to have got short shrift.




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